Food and Travel August/September 2011 Issue N
o 139 Staffordshire, Vancouver, Kaunas, Sorrento, Valencia, Lake Escapes, Wine Holidays, Tom
atoes
Taste the experience – experience the taste
City breaksValencia, kaunas and sorrento
Lakes of the worLdFiVe OF tHe best: PerU Usa switzerland slOVenia enGland
Istanbul Seasonal recipes Bread making Cookery schools Golf Bordeaux
Aug/Sept 2011 £3.95
summerchill out
With sorbets, sherbets and frozen yoghurts
The British revolution begins street food
Gourmet travels
VanCOUVerstaFFOrdsHire
a taste OF JaPan
in dorset
001_Food cover Ices rev#524491.indd 1 27/6/11 12:53:44
food & travel 5923food & travel
a listed 18th-century barn in Chideock provides a somewhat unusual setting for Japanese chef Shigeaki takezoe to introduce his guests to the flavours of his homeland
PHotoGraPHY BY aNGela dUKeS
Hidden in the folds of Dorset’s Jurassic coast is the sleepy country village of Chideock where, unexpectedly,
Shigeaki Takezoe and his wife Diana serve delicious Japanese food. Inside the peculiarly named Hell Barn in this rural corner of England they hide a devilishly good secret – a taste of authentic Japan.
When Shigeaki, a chef, offered an auction prize of a traditional Japanese dinner at his son’s primary school, he little imagined how popular it would prove. His dishes went down a storm and other people began clamouring for him to cook for them. The rest, as they say, is history.
Now, from their beautiful 18th-century home, the couple run five self-catering holiday cottages and, on a strictly bespoke basis, serve Japanese food to both residents and non-residents. You can choose to have a simple menu of dishes
such as grilled salted fish or tonkatsu – deep-fried breaded pork cutlets. Or you can choose an elaborate Japanese dining experience with everything from chicken or salmon in teriyaki sauce with rice, miso soup and salad to crispy tempura.
It’s a real surprise to find genuine Japanese cuisine in deepest Dorset, and the contrast with this bucolic country-cottage setting is startling. Produce is of the highest quality; Shigeaki sources fish and meat from local suppliers – the crew of the local fishing boat even delivers its catch personally.
And if the phrase ‘Japanese cuisine’ conjures up images of raw fish and complicated recipes, Shigeaki insists it doesn’t have to be like that. Japanese food can be simple and made easily at home with delicious results. To prove it, he gave Food and Travel the recipes for six of his favourite dishes...
dorsetwhere japan meets
food focus
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Prawn and vegetable temPura F&T sake match Crisp, fragrant, with slight sweetness (eg urakasumi Honjikomi, miyagi)
fillet beef Pan-fried witH soy sauCe
and garliC butter F&T sake match sweet
and creamy, with aromas of coconut and melon (eg Kamoizumi nigori
ginjo, Hiroshima)
While Shigeaki’s Dorset dining experience is relatively informal, in Japan eating is synonymous with ritual. Firstly, every meal should begin with the phrase ‘itadakimasu’, which, roughly translated, means: ‘I receive with gratitude’.
Dishes are served in separate bowls and while they’re meant to be eaten at the same time, they should never be combined. This is especially true of rice, which is almost sacred. It should ideally be eaten plain. Never put other foods onto your rice, or pour soy sauce all over it; doing so would be as uncouth as dousing your whole meal in ketchup!
When eating with chopsticks, rest them neatly together across your bowl or plate, or on chopstick rests. Chopsticks positioned so they’re pointing straight up in food (especially in bowls of rice) are reminiscent of funeral rites. For the same reason, never pass food from your chopsticks to
the chopsticks of another person – put the piece of food straight onto their plate instead.
To avoid the suggestion that your host has bought poor-quality utensils, never rub wooden chopsticks together to rid them of splinters – it sends out the signal that you think they are cheap.
One key difference between Japanese and Western etiquette is that when eating noodles in hot broth, such as ramen, it’s polite to slurp – not only does this cool off the noodles as you eat them, it’s also a sign that you’re enjoying your food.
Formalities and rituals go beyond just the food. Pour the drinks of others at the table; in turn they’ll pour your drink. When they do, be sure to hold your glass up to meet them.
Finally, when you have finished eating it is customary to say ‘gochisosama’, which means ‘thank you for a good meal’.
recipes start on page 119
Turning Japanese
food & travel 60
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recipes start on page 127
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travel strapteriyaki salmon
F&T sake match Floral but firm, with black liquorice and pine notes (eg taisetsu, Junmai Ginjo, Hokkaido)
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food & travel 63
food focus
recipes start on page 127
grilled black bream with
miso soup, rice, salad and pickles
F&T sake match peach and grapefruit-scented, with a dry
finish (hoyo genji, miyagi)
recipes start on page 119
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ScallopS pan-fried with Soy Sauce and garlic butter
F&T sake match Mild and light, with delicate fruitiness (eg tedorigawa Kinka nama-daiginjo, ishikawa)
deTailsif you’d like to sample Shigeaki’s cooking at hell barn cottages, all meals must be ordered in advance, and most larger menus are pre-agreed. cottages start from £300 per week (the largest, Jasmine cottage, sleeps six plus cot). Meals start from £12 per person for residents and £30 per person for non-residents (minimum of four people). 01297 489589, hellbarn.co.uk
food & travel 64
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food focus
pork tonkatsu
F&T sake match Earthy,
round, with nose of rice and nuts (eg nanbu Bijin tokubetsu Junmai, Iwate)
recipes start on page 119
65food & travel
sake matches by Jean-Louis naveihan, sake sommeLier at sumosan
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